Signs You May Be an Adult Character in a Y.A. Novel Plus: a new cartoon from Adam Sacks. The New Yorker sent this email to their subscribers on January 30, 2024. Plus: a new cartoon from Adam Sacks.View in your browser|Update your preferences\xa0Today’s cartoon, by Adam Sacks:“And the Academy Award for Best Oscar Campaign goes to . . .”Open in browser to share this cartoon »Buy a print »\u200aMore in Humor\u200aSigns You May Be an Adult Character in a Y.A. NovelYou were a little bit wild when you were a young adult, which is completely imperceptible now, except when certain music is played.By\xa0Shannon ReedThings I Worry My Therapist Is Writing Down“He’s the only one with these kinds of problems and he’s handling them all terribly!”By\xa0Miriam Jayaratna, Nate Odenkirk, and Olivia PeciniThe Most Likely Ways I Will Die in the Hudson ValleyDriving off the side of a mountain. Lyme disease. A stampede of Brooklyn ladies.By Blythe Roberson\u200aThis Week’s Caption Contest\u200aSubmit a caption.Play to win.You be the judge.Help us pick three finalists by rating submissions.The final three.Help select the winning caption.\xa0The winner.See who won (finally).\u200aOne More from the Cartoon Archives . . .\u200aSee cartoons for purchase in our store »\xa0\u200aName Drop\u200aName DropName Drop,The New Yorker’sTrivia GamePlay a quiz from our archive: Can you guess the identity of a notable person—contemporary or historical—in six clues?\xa0\u200aMore from The New Yorker\u200aThe Front RowIs Sundance Playing It Safe?In a quiet year for the festival, two gems stand out.By Richard BrodyPodcast Dept.Listening to the N.F.L.A plots and B plots in the best podcasts for the playoffs.By Adam GopnikBooksMargaret Cavendish’s “Mad” ImaginationIn a time when women were not formally educated, Cavendish became a natural philosopher, an autobiographer, and a fiction writer—and was considered both an eccentric and a genius.By Merve EmrePhoto BoothWhat Garry Winogrand Saw in ColorA rarely seen body of Winogrand’s work is more inviting than his black-and-white pictures, but no less layered or sly.By Vince AlettiYou’re receiving this e-mail because you signed up for Daily Humor fromThe New Yorker. Was this e-mail forwarded to you?Sign up.\xa0Manage your preferences|View our privacy policy|Unsubscribe\xa0Send feedback|Share e-mail\xa0Copyright © Condé Nast 2024. One World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. All rights reserved.